AAL Stock Recent News
AAL LATEST HEADLINES
While the top- and bottom-line numbers for American Airlines (AAL) give a sense of how the business performed in the quarter ended March 2025, it could be worth looking at how some of its key metrics compare to Wall Street estimates and year-ago values.
Southwest Airlines Co (NYSE:LUV), American Airlines Group Inc (NASDAQ:AAL, ETR:A1G) and Alaska Air Group (NYSE:ALK) have joined other major US airline carriers in pulling their 2025 profit outlook amid economic uncertainty and weaker-than-expected travel demand. Handing down its first quarter earnings on Wednesday evening, Southwest noted difficulties in forecasting due to “short-lived booking trends.
“We came off a strong fourth quarter, saw decent business in January and really domestic leisure travel fell off considerably as we went into the February time frame,” CEO Robert Isom told CNBC's “Squawk Box” on Thursday.
As earnings season swings into gear, the cost of ongoing US tariffs is emerging as a source of negative sentiment, weighing on first-quarter results and prompting lowered guidance from several large corporations.
American Airlines (AAL) came out with a quarterly loss of $0.59 per share versus the Zacks Consensus Estimate of a loss of $0.69. This compares to loss of $0.34 per share a year ago.
CNBC's Phil LeBeau and American Airlines CEO Robert Isom join 'Squawk Box' to discuss the airline's quarterly earnings results, impact of policy uncertainty, travel demand outlook, and more.
Shares of American Airlines Group Inc. were descending Thursday, after the air carrier provided a downbeat profit forecast for the current quarter and said there was too much economic uncertainty to maintain its full-year outlook.
American Airlines joined Delta and Southwest in pulling its 2025 financial guidance citing economic uncertainty. American expects second-quarter, adjusted earnings of between 50 cents and $1, compared with estimates for 99 cents a share.
American Airlines Group Inc. AAL will release earnings results for the first quarter, before the opening bell on Thursday, April 24.
The flight path for U.S. airline stocks is very much up in the air.